Asclepias syriaca -L.-
common milkweed


Entry Type: Species

Species Name: Asclepias syriaca -L.-

Common Name: common milkweed

Myaamia Name: leninši

Description:

Harvest Seasons: Spring

Harvest Comments:

Habitats: Wet Prairie grasslands with flooding

Uses: Food, Material, Customs

Locations: Undetermined

Media

Sources

Rafert, S. 1989

Reference Type: Horticultural Info

Archival Data:

"Milkweed was very important. Milkweed was usually gathered when it was about eight to ten inches tall. We always broke off the small leaves at the top--I mean the leaves at the top which were really the largest ones--they used mostly the stem, much like asparagus".

Comments: N/A


Rafert, S. 1989

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

"It was boiled first--they didn't have flour for thickening--so they just boiled it and ate it with seasoning. Seasoning was probably some type of meat. But in later years, as they acquired knowledge of using thickening like flour or corn meal, they thickened it, and made a type of gravy, much like you would cook asparagus today. It was one of the real important things for the Indians, important foods of the spring." "It was used like a tonic and of course it was something green, which they hadn't had in the winter time" .

Comments: N/A


Aatotankiki myaamiaki 1998-2006

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

A milkweed harvesting trip was part of the Myaamia language camp in June 2004, when the milkweed had both young shoots and taller stems for harvest. Mildred Walker, Howard Walker, Daryl Baldwin, and many other tribal members participated in this late spring harvesting. 

Comments: N/A


Rafert, S. 1992

Reference Type: Use - Medicinal

Archival Data:

The milky sap is used to treat warts.

Comments: N/A


Rafert, S. 1978

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

"Wash harvested buds well and chop up. Boil them, pour off water, parboil it and cook until tender, then pour off most of water, then add bacon. Then sprinkle flour over it and stir it. Eva always made it into rivlins, which is using fine flour and milk or water, cooking it a bit after adding the flour. Or just add vinegar and salt to taste, not pepper".

Comments: N/A


Rafert, S. 1978

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

Swan Hunter liked eating milkweed, and her father did too. Eva also mentioned wanting to get some milkweed and knowing where. Swan says she had some plants to harvest. Eva froze some.

Comments: N/A


Gonella, M.P 2003-2006

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

"Pick the center, tender leaves and shoot part, of the top of the plant and cook it". She also indicated that when the pods were small, you can take out the insides [immature floss] and cook it for eating.

Comments: N/A


Olds, J., Olds, D. and D. Tippman 1999

Reference Type: Use - Medicinal

Archival Data:

"My mother [mother-in-law: Rebbeca M. Stitt Walker] used milkweed and other plants as medicine. It was good spring medicine. She cooked it and we ate it because it was good. It had a lot of iron in it and everything and so we'd have that for greens. Pods were not eaten".

Comments: N/A


Gonella, M.P 2003-2006

Reference Type: Horticultural Info

Archival Data:

Mildred Walker's mother-in-law, Rebbeca M. Stitt Walker, brought seeds of common milkweed from Indiana and planted them in her garden in the Quapaw, Oklahoma area for harvesting and eating as greens. Other women in the neighborhood also harvested milkweed for eating and when Mildred returned one time as an adult to her old home and to Rebecca's old garden, the milkweed had been harvested, presumably by the old friends of Rebecca.

Comments: N/A


Gonella, M.P 2003-2006

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

Mildred Walker remarked that the young shoots and leaves of common milkweed they harvested for eating were fuzzier and narrower than the ones we harvested during a language camp outing.

Comments: Some variation in leaf width and fuzziness does occur between individual plants and areas. Mildred also picked a very young dogbane (Apocynum cannabinum) shoot and said it was a type of 'milkweed' and was eaten as greens. Dogbane has narrower leaves, not necessarily fuzzier, but has milky sap and looks very similar to common milkweed shoots--it may have been called a milkweed at this stage due to its similar look and milky sap. – Michael Gonella


Baldwin, D 1997

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

"The young shoots with four leaves or less are harvested in early spring".

Comments: N/A


Tippman, D. 1999

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

Jim Strack and his family did not eat milkweed but he knew other Myaamia people that did.

Comments: N/A


Gonella, M.P 2003-2006

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

Leaves and young stems are eaten as greens

Comments: N/A


Gonella, M.P 2003-2006

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

The sap from common milkweed was used as chewing gum.

Comments: N/A


Gonella, M.P 2003-2006

Reference Type: Use - Medicinal

Archival Data:

"The sap of milkweed was used to remove warts".

Comments: N/A


Gonella, M.P 2003-2006

Reference Type: Use - Food/Medicinal

Archival Data:

"Milkweed was used as food since 1400's and 1500's, known as 'medicine food', this is not written down anywhere, that it was used so far back, but the info has been passed down orally . . . soup was made from milkweed, using some part for medicine or food".

Comments: N/A


Gonella, M.P 2003-2006

Reference Type: Use - Food/Medicinal

Archival Data:

The young shoots, top four leaves of stems, and flower buds are gathered, cooked and eaten. Sap is used to remove warts.

Comments: N/A


Gonella, M.P 2003-2006

Reference Type: Horticultural Info

Archival Data:

Dani Tippman and her mother Mary (Strack) Swenda harvest the top four leaves of taller plants, or plants of any stage of growth and cook them as greens. "The four leaves represent the four directions, " said Mary. The white milkweed, not eaten was probably a name for dogbane, which looks reddish and not-fuzzy when young, unlike milkweed. She has noticed the stems kept growing and flowered after tops removed for eating.

Comments: N/A


Rafert, S. 1978

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

"Harvest young shoots at various heights, when they first have the little buds beginning and the buds are still green, then you just take about 6-8 inches off the top".

Comments: N/A


Peoria, Eastern Shawnee, Wyandotte, Seneca-Cayuga, Miami and Ottawa Tribes 2003

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

Asclepias syriaca was listed in this report as a plant commonly used by the local tribes in the city of Miami, Oklahoma, including the Miami Tribe of Oklahoma.

Comments: N/A


Dunn, J.P. 1902

Reference Type: Use - Food

Archival Data:

[Gabriel] "Godfroy says young milkweed has "substance", just like a potato - used as substitute for potatoes - cooked like asparagus, and put a little vinegar on before eating makes it better. The flower buds are also used to put in soup".

"Common milkweed - län-ín-zha - makes (are like asparagus) greens most preferred by Indians, young shoots - the upland milkweed and pleurisy root - butterfly weed - asclepia tuberosa is bitter - not good. They call this lä-mon-dä-sa pl. laki - or "young pup root"".

Comments: N/A

Timmons, F. 1946

Reference Type: Description

Archival Data :

"Asclepias syriaca has an extensive root system with lateral roots at two depths, the upper 4 to 8 inches below the surface and the lower 2 to 12 inches below that one. These two layers are connected by vertical taproots several feet apart. It spreads vegetatively by sending up shoots along the surface lateral roots and occasionally from deeper lateral roots to form clumps that appear to be separate plants, but which actually all come from the same root system. These clumps can be up to 50 feet across".

Comments: N/A


Gonella, M.P 2003-2006

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data :

The dominant vegetation around Miami, Oklahoma and western Kansas at the time of Myaamia relocation was tallgrass prairie, the large buffalo herds and fire kept the forest limited to river bottoms. The buffalo only went through a particular area about once a year; probably following early spring shoots of prairie plants north as spring progressed. Common milkweed plants would've persisted well in this annual, early spring disturbance, and Myaamia harvesting of this disturbance could have been a fair mimic of the disturbance caused by buffalo.

Comments: N/A


Steyermark, J.A. 1963

Reference Type: Horticultural Info

Archival Data :

Cases of poisoning have been recorded from livestock feeding on leaves and stems, but usually these plants remain untouched in pastures

Comments: N/A


Foster, S. & Duke, J.A. 1990

Reference Type: Description

Archival Data :

This species flowers from June to August, fruiting from July to the first frost.

Comments: N/A


McCauley, D. 1991

Reference Type: Ecological Info

Archival Data :

The red milkweed beetle Tetraopes tetraoophthalmus feeds almost entirely on this species of milkweed, its life cycle often restricted to one plant.

Comments: N/A

Cheatham, S. & Johnston, M.C. 2002

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

Young shoots of other milkweed species have been noted as food of Canadian Indians, beginning as early as the 18th century. Use of young flower buds and pods as food by Native Americans in recent times has also been documented for the Zuni, Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Rio Grande Pueblo at Jemez, Tarahumara, Tewa, Kiowa, White Mountain Apache, and Hopi. Often, pods were cooked with meat in an attempt to soften the meat by action of a compound in the pods that caused tenderizing. There are some reports of Native American groups eating butterfly milkweed, Asclepias tuberosa tubers, although these are treated by contemporary researchers as poisonous. Numerous Asclepias species were used by numerous tribes for the bast stem fibers for cordage, ropes, basketry and netting in historic times.

Comments: N/A


Densmore, F. 1974

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

The Chippewa word for Asclepias syriaca was recorded as as "ini'niwunj" meaning, man-like, and it was used as a medicine for the diseases of women, as a charm to counteract evil charms, and the flowers were eaten.

Comments: N/A


Cheatham, S. & Johnston, M.C. 2002

Reference Type: Description

Archival Data:

"And while A. syriaca blooms copiously from July through August, only a small percentage of the flowers set pods, and many pods are only incompletely filled out or are aborted". 

Comments: N/A


McPherson, A. and S. McPherson. 1977

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

"The Miami Indians used the sap to rid themselves of warts . . . milkweed may have been cultivated by the Potawatomie Indians. Milkweed grew so close to the wigwams that it could have been planted there, since the Potawatomies used it for food and fiber".

Comments: N/A


Coulter, S. 1932

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

The dried roots of Asclepias tuberosa, Butterfly milkweed, in small doses of 1-3 gm reduces arterial tension by depressing heart action and causing diaphoresis (excessive sweating) and increasing diuresis (excessive urination). It is also an expectorant, and can be a slight tonic, mild laxative, carminative (relieving flatulence), and an emetic in large doses.

Comments: N/A


Olds, J., Olds, D. and D. Tippman 1999

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

Mildred Walker has consistently described two milkweed species being used as greens; one being slender and growing in wetter areas with white flowers and another bigger and more robust and fuzzy. When in the field with her she said that young shoots of Asclepias syriaca is the regular one that was gathered.

Comments: N/A


Dunn, J.P. ca. 1900

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

The Myaamia did not eat the shoots of a smaller species of Asclepias, called the white-flowered milkweed [Squaw milkweed, Apocynum cannabinum] which they called 'lemontehsa'. They considered the small shoots or pups of this species to be poisonous.

Comments: N/A


Smith, H. 1933

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

The Forest Potawatomi used stem fibers from the common milkweed for cordage, as well as the root as a type of female medicine, and flowers and buds used in meat soups. "One always finds a riot of milkweed close to the wigwam or house of the Indian, suggesting that they have been cultivated". 

Comments: N/A


Smith, H. 1932

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

The root is used by Ojibway as a female medicine. Fresh flowers and tips of shoots are gathered and dried and cooked in soups. The sap along with the milk of Canada hawkweed are used to put on a deer call.

Comments: N/A


Clark, J.E 1993

Reference Type: Related Info

Archival Data:

The Shawnee collected this plant.

Comments: N/A

Legends

  • L.: L. stands for Carl Linneaus, a Swedish botanist and zoologist living from 1707 - 1778, who formed the binomial nomenclature system for scientific naming of species (the two part name). His initial after a scientific name indicates he was the authority for that species name.
  • sp.: Indicates the actual species name cannot or need not be specified. Example: Lilium sp. indicates a single species in the genus Lilium that is not known or does not need to be specified.
  • spp.: (plural) indicates "several species", two or more species of the given genus. Example: Lilium spp. indicates 2 or more species in the genus that cannot or do not need to be distinguished.
  • Use - Unknown: A record for this plant exists but does not include explicit information about the plant's cultural use. It is probable the Myaamia used the plant.
  • Botanical Sources: Sources of any botanical data for this plant species that is not related to its cultural use or significance.
  • Related Sources: Data indirectly related to Myaamia ethnobotany, including non-Myaamia uses of the plant in contemporary and historic times.
  • Myaamia Archival Sources: All records of plant use obtained directly from a Myaamia tribal member in an interview, recorded by a second party or by self-recording.
  • Undetermined (Plant Use): There exists use or other information about a certain, unknown plant species, but the specific species has not yet been determined.
  • Medicinal: For the purposes of this database, medicinal uses of plants and medicinal knowledge are defined as: Commonly held communal knowledge regarding the use of plant-based substances that aid in maintaining a healthy mind, body or spirit, including tonics and teas.
  • Technology: For the purposes of this database, technological uses of plants are defined as: Plants used in the making of food processing, canoes, rafts, dyes, tools, utensils, weapons, hunting and fishing gear (i.e. net, weir, etc.), cordage, string, rope, fodder plant species, firewood, any plants used in trade, etc.
  • Material: For the purposes of this database, material uses of plants are defined as: Plants used in construction of dwellings (floor mats, roofing, side walls), furniture, baskets, storage items, musical instruments, games, crafts, jewelry, cordage used in crafts, etc.
  • Food: For the purposes of this database, food uses of plants are defined as: Plants used as consumed food, spices and seasonings, but not teas or tonics.
  • Customs: For the purposes of this database, customary uses of plants are defined as: Plants involved in a customary ceremony, ritual or traditional event, including ritual smoking, chewing tobacco, war rituals, special mats used to sit on during ceremonies. Customary uses of plants, in this database, does not including plants used for recreation (material), structures where ceremonies take place (material) or medicinal smoking (medicinal).
  • Eastern Myaamia Lands: Eastern Myaamia lands (eastern myaamionki) are centered around northern Indiana, and including western Ohio, eastern Illinois, southern Michigan, and the northernmost portions of Kentucky.
  • Western Myaamia Lands: Western Myaamia lands (western myaamionki) include western Kansas and northeastern Oklahoma.